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Example sentences for "these pages"

  • To such alone would I speak in these pages, to help them hold the substance of their fathers' faith.

  • The Eternal Wisdom calls from out these pages to the sons of men: Hearken unto me ye that follow after righteousness.

  • Let her footstep, as she comes and goes, in these pages, be like that other footstep to whose airy fall your own heart once beat time.

  • Accident has made him the starting-point of the strange family story which it is the purpose of these pages to unfold.

  • The passages omitted, here and elsewhere, in Miss Halcombe's Diary are only those which bear no reference to Miss Fairlie or to any of the persons with whom she is associated in these pages.

  • How can I see her again as she looked when my eyes first rested on her--as she should look, now, to the eyes that are about to see her in these pages?

  • There are no more words of explanation to add on my appearance for the second time in these pages.

  • To Great Britain, as we have seen in these pages, the keeping from the North Sea coast of all great hostile Powers is a vital thing.

  • For my only object in these pages is to lay before the reader a commentary which will explain the general strategy of the war.

  • These pages do not constitute a brief on behalf of Lady Purbeck.

  • Let not the reader suppose that these pages are so early to be sullied by a scandal.

  • But if almost any woman will get the right mental attitude toward sex-meeting, and then can be courted, as has been prescribed in these pages, the cases are rare indeed where a woman can be found who is really anesthetic.

  • Having said which, here shall follow some suggestions as to how such estate may be reached by the readers of these pages.

  • It is to some such rehearsing of our original message, a restatement of the thesis which we, as preachers, are set to commend, that we turn ourselves in these pages.

  • Many men and minds have contributed to these pages.

  • It lies in that world view whose expressions in literature, philosophy and social organizations we have been reviewing in these pages.

  • Part II True Mode of Meeting Mr. Kingsley What shall be the special imputation, against which I shall throw myself in these pages, out of the thousand and one which my accuser directs upon me?

  • Your name shall occur again as little as I can help, in the course of these pages.

  • Elsewhere in these pages we have made the distinction between knowledge and wisdom.

  • I have now completed all the preliminary notices of my near relatives, which it is necessary to present in these pages; and may proceed at once to the more immediate subject of my narrative.

  • Two of them, at least, will be found important to the progress of events in these pages.

  • May your kind eyes, love, be the first that fall on these pages, when the writer has parted from them for ever!

  • My heart beat fast, my head felt confused; but I was resolute in my determination to tell my father, at all hazards, the tale of degradation which I have told in these pages.

  • There are few elements of our present life which, in a greater or less degree, are not made vocal in these pages.

  • These pages reproduce me very imperfectly, and there are many things in me of which I find no trace in them.

  • God, however, as has been pointed out in the very beginning of these pages, does not only punish the wrongdoings of His children.

  • This sarcastic condemnation was spoken by Miss Lilian Dale to her sister Isabella, and referred to a gentleman with whom we shall have much concern in these pages.

  • His life hitherto, as recorded in these pages, had afforded him no brilliant success, had hardly qualified him for the role of hero which he has been made to play.

  • As I have said before, in some of these pages, no walks taken by the man are so crowded with thought as those taken by the boy.

  • Of his future fortunes there is not space to speak in these pages.

  • Every individual is supposed to be born under a particular destiny or fate (as has been over and over again stated in these pages), which it is impossible to avoid.

  • Its progress in Germany is particularly connected with the subject of these pages.

  • But it is foreign to these pages to dwell further on the military achievements or political intrigues of the times of which we are speaking.

  • The writer of these pages found, with great difficulty, a copy of it in the London market.

  • This period would easily admit of several subdivisions; and did we pretend in these pages to give the reader more than a sketch of literary history, we should perhaps find it advisable to adopt them.

  • For such an exposition there is no room in these pages.

  • I have noticed this person before in these pages but I will now give him a more elaborate introduction to the reader; but as he is an unsavory subject I will make the introduction as brief as possible.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "these pages" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    its best; never goin; organic whole; out here; particular species; shall save his people from their; she observed; singular fact; these animals; these cases; these circumstances; these conditions; these countries; these great; these islands; these latter; these little; these matters; these means; these occasions; these pages; these questions; these three; these two; these words; you must come and